* Some background is here if you need it. Mark Maxwell…
Maxwell: You can learn an awful lot about a politician combing through their voting record, especially when what they say on the campaign trail and what they do in office doesn’t quite add up.
Darren Bailey: I got ticked off at the tax increases that came in 2018.
Maxwell: Long before Darren Bailey arrived in Springfield in 2019, he was voting on issues that impacted his neighbor’s budgets,
Bailey: Serving on the school board.
Maxwell: From 1996 to 2012, Clay County’s tax records show every time a property tax hike was on the table in the North Clay school district, Darren Bailey voted for it.
Bailey: I believe that’s a much different scenario. You know, taxing bodies have the ability to levy a certain amount.
Maxwell: When reporters pressed Bailey to explain his tax hikes, he downplayed the incremental cost increases.
Bailey: Many times it was $5 a household. I think the one time at the maximum was $19 a household.
Helen Joan-Cook: It could be a little better, especially for senior citizens.
Maxwell: 87-year-old Helen Joan-Cook lives in Bailey’s hometown on a fixed income.
Joan-Cook: Don’t go too far, when you make your house payment and everything else.
Maxwell: Over 17 years, Bailey voted to raise the property tax levy 13 times, adding up to an 81 percent increase, far higher than the rate of property tax growth in Chicago over that same span.
Joan-Cook: I just think that the taxes should be lowered, really.
Maxwell: What would it mean for you if you had a lower property tax bill?
Joan-Cook: It would mean I’d have a few dollars left over for food when I have to really cut corners.
Maxwell: Bailey blamed his votes on the state’s record low levels of state education funding.
Bailey: Many times in a small school district, state government would short school districts ,they still do it today. Sometimes we got the money a year, two years later, sometimes we didn’t.
Maxwell: On that point, Bailey is right. Illinois spent so little money on education for so long, local school districts often had to make up the difference with property tax increases. But here’s the key, when Bailey finally arrived in Springfield and had the power to do something about it, the House and Senate voted to increase state education funding three times. And three times, Bailey voted against it.
I mean… Ouch.
* Included graph…
* Ms. Joan-Cook…
Right out of central casting.
* From the Internet version…
When Grain Systems, Inc. (GSI) closed its Flora manufacturing site in Bailey’s district in 2019, the newly inaugurated state representative blamed the job losses on “tax hikers” who “keep raising taxes and increasing fees on families and businesses.”
However, long before he was taking votes in the General Assembly, Bailey was voting to extend and raise property tax levies at the North Clay School District.
Tax records at the Clay County Treasurer’s office and the Illinois Department of Revenue show that from 1996 to 2012, Bailey voted to raise the property tax levy by a combined 81%. Chicago Public Schools showed more fiscal restraint, raising its property tax levy by 57.1% over the same period.
That would be almost double the rate of inflation for the time period.
* Meanwhile, Bailey was on WGN Radio’s Lisa Dent show today. Here he is talking about Richard Irvin…
This situation with Irvin is an absolute farce and I think it’s going to fall flat on its face. Irvin is a Democrat in disguise. I think the Republicans across Illinois have already figured that out. And I think he’s probably spent what he’s got.
* On Ken Griffin backing Irvin…
We have absolutely no facts or proof that Ken Griffin is backing this. This is rumor. I’ll believe it when I see it. And and I will wait, I’ll wait expectantly for his call when he realizes that the candidates, I’m the candidate who will get Illinois back on track.
That’s the second time Bailey has made a pitch for Grif money. But just a few weeks ago, he was calling Irvin and the rest of the slate “bought and paid for candidates.” I dunno, maybe pick a lane?
* On the governor’s proposed one-year elimination of the grocery tax and freezing the Motor Fuel Tax for a year…
Well, again, I’ll believe it when I see it. It doesn’t surprise me. We’ve received over $21 billion of COVID relief that the governor has taken and unfortunately refused to get the state fiscally sound again. And yeah, I expect him to toss money to the four winds to people, and I expect him to hope that they forget the devastation and the destruction that Illinois has gone through in the last two years.
Please pardon any transcription errors.
*** UPDATE 1 *** The Irvin/Bourne campaign is pushing this video made by Darren Bailey on February 17, 2021…
* Transcript…
I think many people have become disgusted with politics. I was that way 10 years ago, I checked out. Friends we can’t check out right now because we’ve got to get ourselves educated, we’ve got to get ourselves informed. And then we’ve got to get to work and do something about it.
Get involved locally, the decisions that are made locally, they affect the property taxes that are affecting us so adversely.
As usual with Bailey, when somebody else does it - COVID loans, tax hikes, etc. - it’s bad. When he does it, well, friends, it’s good.
*** UPDATE 2 *** Irvin campaign email…
Friend,
“Over 17 years Bailey voted to raise the property tax levy 13 times, adding up to an 81 percent increase, far higher than the rate of property tax growth in Chicago”
We wanted to make sure you got to see this local news report about Darren Bailey. He may say he’s against tax increases, but as a member of his local school board he voted to increase taxes THIRTEEN TIMES by more than EIGHTY PERCENT!!
Darren Bailey Voted for 81% Property Tax Hikes
But that shouldn’t surprise you about a career politician who’s been in office for 20 years, and now running for his 4th different elected office.
87 year-old Helen Joan Cook, who lives in Bailey’s hometown, says property tax hikes like Bailey’s make it hard to afford food and thinks they should be lowered. If you agree with Helen that property taxes should be lowered, SHARE THIS VIDEO AND HOLD CAREER POLITICIANS ACCOUNTABLE.